Michigan State Industries v. Fischer Hardware Co.

197 N.E. 785, 50 Ohio App. 153, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 184, 2 Ohio Op. 171, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 245
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1934
DocketNo 619
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 785 (Michigan State Industries v. Fischer Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michigan State Industries v. Fischer Hardware Co., 197 N.E. 785, 50 Ohio App. 153, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 184, 2 Ohio Op. 171, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 245 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*186 OPINION

By ROSS, J.

It is the contention of the plaintiff in error that the appointment of the receiver was made by the Court of Common Pleas without jurisdiction, and that the order is, therefore, void, and can be now collaterally attacked, that the plaintiff in error is entitled to levy execution upon the assets of the corporation. A number of interesting propositions of law are presented by this contention.

Without in detail taking up the several paragraphs of §11894, GC, it is obvious that there was no ground for the appointment of the receiver under the provisions of this section, the only section of the Code at all applicable. The power to appoint a receiver must be found in the statutes. Hoiles v Watkins et, 117 Oh St, 165. In the case of Russell, Admr. v Fourth National Bank, 103 Oh St, 248, the third syllabus is:

“Although a court may have jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter in an action it cannot transcend the power legally conferred on it.”

^ The corporation cannot, by consent, confer a jurisdiction which otherwise does not exist. In Hoiles v Watkins et, supra, it is stated, page 175:

‘ We think the consent of the corporation cannot confer jurisdiction to appoint a receiver. Couse’s Ohio Private Corporations, p. 2180; Clark on Receivers, Vol. 1, §71, and cases cited; 34 Cyc., 106.”

The Bank, having a full and adequate remedy at law, by levying execution, no equity jurisdiction could possibly exist in the court. Hoiles v Watkins et, supra.

The court, having no jurisdiction to appoint a receiver in the suit upon the cognovit note after judgment and before execution, such appointment was a nullity and void.

In Wehrle v Wehrle, 39 Oh St, 365, it is stated in the opinion at pages 366, 367:

“The judgment or final order of a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter and parties, however erroneous, irregular or informal such judgment or order may be, is valid until reversed or set aside; and, however the rule may be in other states (Thompson v Whitman, 18 Wall. 457), where the judgment or order of a court of general jurisdiction in this state contains a finding that there was jurisdiction, and such finding is consistent with other parts of the record, the judgment or order is protected from collateral attack (Cullen v Ellison, 13 Oh St, 446; Scobey v Gano, 35 Oh St, 550); within which rule the orders of probate courts are classed. Schroyer v Richmind, 16 Oh St, 455. If the judgment or order is erroneous, it may be reversed; if it is irregular or informal, it may be corrected on motion; in neither case, however, is it subject to collateral attack. But if the court in fact had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, whether the case be in rern or in personam, or in cases in personam, of the parties, and there is no finding of the court that it had jurisdiction of the parties, any judgment or order which may be rendered, however regular the same may be in matter of form, is a mere nullity, and may be so treated in a collateral as well as in a direct attack. The distinction is between a case where the court is clothed with power to act in which a judgment or order is valid, though it may be erroneous or irregular, and a case in which there was no power to act, in which case a judgment or order rendered on the assumed existence of such power, is a nullity. Plain as this distinction seems to be, there is sometimes difficulty in applying it.”

Being void, it may thus be collaterally attacked. In 53 C. J., 84, it is stated:

“On the other hand, if the court is without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver, its order of appointment may be attacked or disregarded whenever it comes collaterally in question; but the jurisdiction of the court will be upheld by every legitimate inference if the record does not disclose the absence of, or merely defectively shows, jurisdiction in the particular case.”

See also: The People v Frank S. Weigley et. and The People v Albert T. Ames et, 155 Ill., 491; State of Nevada ex Nenzel et, v Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, 43 A.L.R., 1331; and In Re Richardson’s Estate, 294 Fed., 349. At page 359 of the opinion in the Richardson case, it is stated:

“If it appears upon the face of the proceedings, that a court’s order appointing a receiver was without authority of law, and. therefore void, the order may be assailed collaterally, and with impunity, by anybody, *187 State v Dist. Court, 21 Mont. 155, 53 Pac. 272, 69 Am St. Rep. 645; Tenth Nat. Bank v Smith Const. Co., 227 Pa. 354, 76 Atl. 67, 136 Am. St. Rep., 884. If a court is without jurisdiction, the order is void, and may be attacked or disregarded whenever it comes collaterally in question. 34 Cyc. 168.”

In State of Montana ex Johnston v District Court, 21 Mont., 155, at 159:

“But here the error of the court in adjudging petitioner guilty upon the facts alleged was one that involved an excess of the court’s jurisdiction. This is apparent, under the decision of this court in State v Clancy, 20 Mont. 284, 50 Pac. 852, where it was decided that the original complaint filed in the district court of Silver Bow County in the case of J. D. Thomas et against Thornton-Thomas Mercantile Company was “virtually a blank paper,” and that for various reasons, stated in the opinion, there was no authority of law to appoint a receiver of the corporation at all upon the showing made. The case, therefore, is not one where there has been a receiver appointed by a competent court with jurisdiction over the subject matter and of the parties before it, and where the court’s orders were regular, even though erroneous, but one where the court has done that which is a nullity, and where all the orders, including the one appointing a receiver, and all those subsequent thereto, are absolutely void, and entirely beyond the jurisdiction of the court that made them. (People v Weigley, 155 Ill. 491, 40 NE 300). Such being the state of the case, the order of the district court appointing the receiver can be assailed collaterally, and with impunity by anybody. (Van Fleet’s Collateral Attack, §16).”

Although these authorities clearly indicate that where the court was without jurisdiction to enter a judgment or decree, the same is void and may be the subject of collateral attack, the great reluctance of courts to interfere with the operation of a judgment, notwithstanding that it may be wholly void, is obviously developed in a further examination of the authorities. The stability of judgments is a matter of prime consideration to every court. Every presumption is in favor of the regularity of judgments which have been permitted to stand unimpeached by proceedings in error or other attack. From a review of the cases it is manifest that these principles control even as to persons who are strangers to the original proceedings, though vitally affected thereby. One of the most prominent of such authorities is found in the case of Grant, Receiver of The Struthers Furnace Company v A. B. Leach & Co., 280 U. S., 351. Sub-section (1) of syllabus 2 in that case is:

“(1) The Court of Common Pleas had chancery jurisdiction (§11894 GC) to ap-.

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197 N.E. 785, 50 Ohio App. 153, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 184, 2 Ohio Op. 171, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-state-industries-v-fischer-hardware-co-ohioctapp-1934.